Victim's mother pleads with French escapee to hand himself in

In this photo dated Nov. 22, 2010, notorious French criminal Redoine Faid poses prior to an interview with French all-news TV channel, LCI, as he was promoting his book, in Boulogne-Billancourt, outside Paris, France. Faid serving 25 years for murder made an audacious escape from prison Sunday after a helicopter carrying several heavily armed commandos landed in a courtyard, freed him from a visiting room and carried him away. (IBO/Sipa via AP)

Paris - The mother of a French policewoman killed in an attempted armed robbery in 2010 on Tuesday appealed to an escaped prisoner convicted for the incident to hand himself in.

"Your past will catch up with you. And please, not with blood. Let there not be any more victims," Fouquet said.

Faid was serving a 25-year-sentence for his role in planning the attempted robbery, in which he did not directly take part.

He also had a 10-year sentence to serve for a previous escape, in 2013, when he blasted his way out of jail with explosives and spent six weeks on the run.

The French police's deputy director for combatting organized crime meanwhile said that a group of four or five accomplices were thought to have sprung Faid from prison.

"You can be sure that this particularly dangerous sort of individual, who, I am not afraid to say it, will never be rehabilitated - when they are in prison, they only think about escaping," Philippe Veroni told journalists.

Faid's brother, who had been with him in the prison's visiting room when the gunmen broke in and was held for questioning until Monday, said he had known nothing about the escape plan.

"I will simply say that I had nothing to do with this escape," Brahim Faid told broadcaster BFMTV.